Restaurants 7 min read 14 Apr 2026

Copita: locations, menu, atmosphere — 12 months of photo production for a London brand.

A 12-month engagement, three London restaurants, and a simple brief: photo for Facebook and Instagram, focused on three directions. About what 'production only' means when done with discipline. And about what, honestly, we didn't do for them.

Interiorul restaurantului Copita din Soho, Londra — bar cu blat de cupru, lustre vintage și menus pe mese, fotografie de ședință editorial

Starting point: photo production for a brand from another country

In London, Copita is a small group of restaurants with their own identity — intimate bistros, with a focus on natural wine and Spanish-Mediterranean food. Three locations, each with its own nuance: one more central, one residential, one freshly opened at the time of our collaboration.

They came to us in 2023 with a precise brief:

"We need consistent photo production for Facebook and Instagram. 12 months. Three restaurants. Three directions."

That's it. No broad marketing strategy, no ad campaigns, no business reporting. Pure photo production — honestly framed from the first conversation.

Why a Bucharest agency for a London brand?

Fair question to ask in the first meeting. The answer was simple: the cost of production at the quality level wanted.

Comparable photo studios in London would have cost significantly more for the same output. With our team on planned travel (multi-day shoots, scheduled every few months), the final value was favourable. Plus: a team that had been working on Romanian hospitality for years — which means people who already understand the rhythm, the requirements, and the visual language of a restaurant.

A decision from the first meeting: 3 clear directions

A photo-production contract can easily turn into chaos: 200 frames of which 30 are usable, the rest "we'll see". From the first meeting we decided to discipline the production along three fixed directions, with a clear role for each.

The decision came from experience: if you photograph "everything", you get uniform mediocrity. If you photograph along clear directions, each frame knows what it wants to be.

Direction 1 — Locations

Three restaurants, three distinct atmospheres. The photography had to capture each location's specificity without the spaces blurring together when they show up back-to-back in a feed.

Technical: wide lenses for full views, medium for interior details. Existing light where it worked, controlled LED fills for darker zones. No staged sets — the restaurants as they are, at their best hours.

Direction 2 — Menu

Food photography without the "food porn" clichés.

Editorial decision: no overlit, supersaturated frames with perfect plating that doesn't exist in reality. We want the food the way it actually reaches the table — with the restaurant's light, with the texture of real porcelain, with the right company next to the plate (a wine glass, an old spoon, a naturally crumpled napkin).

Technical: natural light when available, off-camera flash when not. Plating done by the kitchen, not by us. Moderate depth of field — you want to see the food, not aestheticise it past what's real.

Direction 3 — Atmosphere

The hardest of the three. Because the atmosphere of a meal isn't "directed" — it's caught.

Frames with real guests (after their meal, with consent, no posed shots). Evening lights. Moments at the bar. Hands on a glass. Laughter. Faces in conversation.

Here the photographer's discretion matters more than the equipment. Fast prime lenses (35mm f/1.4, 50mm f/1.4), a small camera that doesn't intimidate, never any flash. Caught frames, not produced ones.

A restaurant's atmosphere isn't photographed head-on. It's caught from the corner, quietly, with a small camera.
Digital Image team

Rhythm and logistics

Twelve months of collaboration meant a few major production sessions (planned at regular intervals, each with 3-4 days spent in London across all three locations), plus smaller, punctual shoots for specific events — seasonal menu launches, special moments.

Delivery after each major session: ~150-200 finished frames, organised by direction (locations / menu / atmosphere) and by venue. Multiple formats — Facebook (4:5), Instagram feed (1:1 and 4:5), Stories (9:16). Everything Copita's internal team needs to post without further editing.

What we DIDN'T do — and why it's honest to say so

This is the most important section of the article. Because a 'photo production' case is different from a 'full-service marketing' case — and it matters not to pretend otherwise.

What we didn't do for Copita:

  • Marketing strategy (Copita had their own team for that)
  • Meta Ads or Google Ads campaigns
  • Social media account management — who posts, when, what caption — all theirs
  • Business reporting (sales, bookings, ROI)
  • Content creator partnerships
  • Reels distribution managed by us

What we can't report:

  • Follower or engagement growth (not our metrics)
  • Booking growth (we didn't have access to Copita's data)
  • ROI or cost-per-result (not the scope of the engagement)

This might sound disappointing to a reader looking for numbers. But it's honest. A photo-production contract is exactly that: photo production. What happened after we delivered the frames was Copita's responsibility.

There are clients who want a full-service agency. There are clients who want just professional production. Both contract types are valid. The confusion comes when an agency claims to have done full-service work for an engagement that was scoped only to a portion.

What we learned from working with Copita

Three things:

Discipline along clear directions beats "shoot everything"

Three fixed directions turned what could have been 12 months of muddled frames into a coherent visual library, easy to use across channels.

Cross-border photo production is feasible

With good planning (concentrated sessions, scheduled travel), a quality agency can produce content for a brand in another country at a competitive cost. Distance isn't the blocker — bad communication is.

Honesty on scope matters more than the scope itself

A photo-production contract, communicated clearly as such, is a good contract. A photo-production contract you claim is 'full strategy + production + reporting' is a trap for everyone — agency, client, and any reader of a case study.

That's the Copita story. No flourishes, no invented numbers. Just what we did, with the discipline we did it with.